February 17, 2005 at 3:19 pm
Can anyone please tell the date and location of the first airshow display by a civilian owned Canberrain the Uk ?
Thanks.
By: wl745 - 15th January 2015 at 12:53
Not the one at St A than in 1958 then but it did have the “Speedbird” insignia
By: bazv - 14th January 2015 at 22:13
Thanks for posting the ‘Warhorse’ video Pete – believe it or not I had never seen it LOL
Nice to see Ken Delve and also a smart looking J/T : )
By: David Burke - 14th January 2015 at 19:33
I bought that Canberra nose from a dealer near Birdlip . It was quite a strange deal but thankfully it arrived at Doncaster safely!
By: Graham Boak - 14th January 2015 at 17:42
When I was at Warton, I heard a story that the Ministry were very annoyed with BAe because when they came to end the Canberra’s service (not counting the PR Mk.9s) they still had an excessively large stock of spares. Nothing to do with their own changes of plans for the aircraft, of course. At the same time there was the comment passed that when the last Canberra hangar was being emptied they found one at the back still in Suez stripes. I suspect we have the root of that story in WD935, perhaps not quite as forgotten as assumed.
By: hunterxf382 - 14th January 2015 at 13:24
It was WD935 featured at the beginning of this Video:
Here’s a photo of her found online:
[ATTACH=CONFIG]234562[/ATTACH]
By: TwinOtter23 - 14th January 2015 at 12:59
Were the markings like these?
By: bazv - 14th January 2015 at 12:42
Do you mean WD935 ?
She did have a ‘speedbird’ logo at one time (10 sqn suez anniv markings) !
From the old Les Bywaters website
WD935 was the seventh airframe built of the first 130 B.2 aircraft contract (6/Acft/3520/CB6) placed in March 1949 – two months before the first flight of the prototype.
Interestingly, an month before it was officially ready for collection, WD935 was used by English Electric for “canopy off” flying trials. These trials began with WD935 on 12 April 1951 and were to establish the limits of flight without a canopy and only a small glass screen. Roland “Bee” Beamont flew the trials and found that he could reach 400 knots IAS after which the increase in general buffeting became a problem. A second trial was conducted on 3 June 1951 but this time using B.2 WD934. After the trials, WD935 was eventually awaiting collection on 8 May 1951 and went, under the charge of the Air Ministry’s Controller (Aircraft), to Vickers Armstrong at Wisley for guided weapons trials.Modified at the works at Hurn, it was used in the Vickers Type 888 “Red Dean” guided missiles trials. WD935 first flew with underwing carriers, (fitted 14 October 1953), carrying underwing stores for the first time in January 1954. The weight of the “Red Dean” missile necessitated wing reinforcing. Vickers test pilot, Peter Marsh, had a lucky escape on 21 September 1955 when a brake failure resulted in WD935 overrunning Wisley’s runway and dropping 50 feet into a ditch alongside the A3 London-Southampton road. It stayed at Wisley after this and was used for GEC bomb trials. During this time, WD935 was one of three Canberra B.2’s allocated RAAF serial numbers (it became A84-1) for intended use in missile trials with the Weapons Research Establishment at Woomera. However, this did not come about and it reverted to its original serial before being eventually transferred, on 11 September 1959, to the Bomber Command Development Unit at RAF Wittering for service trials.
After a brief return to Vickers Armstrong for modifications in March 1960, WD935 was sent to BDCU at RAF Finningley in the May of that year for continuation of service trials. On 8 July 1960, it was returned to Air Ministry charge and joined the Command Signals Establishment at Watton. The next eleven years saw WD935 in RAF service with 151Sqn, 97Sqn (both at RAF Watton), and finally 100Sqn at RAF West Raynham. It was moved to RAF St Athan for storage on 23 November 1971.
Allocated to the RAF St Athan museum on 18 March 1975, WD935 was at one point re-painted in the colours and markings of a 10Sqn Canberra during the Suez Crisis and was displayed complete with Operation Musketeer black and white stripes. A year later in 1976 it was allotted 8440M as a Ground Instructional airframe and stayed that way until it was sold at auction in September 1989 to Air Support Services. However, two months later on 23 November 1989 it was scrapped but the nose section was retained at Kew.
The cockpit of this interesting Canberra has now re-surfaced under new ownership and is shown here as a resident at the South Yorkshire Aircraft Museum AeroVenture.
By: Ewan Hoozarmy - 18th February 2005 at 23:07
andrewman,
I was going to say exactly what Les B said!! Its first display was supposed to be Clacton, but weather prevented this….so Duxford it was
By: robmac - 18th February 2005 at 20:23
Not to sure, but if you ask LesB, he could put you in touch with Malcolm at the Midland Air Museum, Coventry, where I work. He currently works very hard on our Canberra there and is a wealth of information on the aircraft type
By: andrewman - 18th February 2005 at 16:26
Thanks Les B 🙂
By: LesB - 17th February 2005 at 16:55
Charlie Tango’s (WJ680) first public display when owned by Ron Mitchell was at Duxford in 1994. I took this pic of it back then at Duxford.

Hope this helps.
By: Ewan Hoozarmy - 17th February 2005 at 15:38
ok, give me a couple of days and I’ll find out..
By: andrewman - 17th February 2005 at 15:37
Yes its G-BURM from the 1990’s I need the to know about.
By: Ewan Hoozarmy - 17th February 2005 at 15:28
If it’s G-BURM during the 1990s, I can probably find out for you. If you mean the Canberras displayed at Farnborough etc by BAC in the late 1960s and 70s, cant help